Thursday, October 30, 2014

Kuwait’s most wanted thief allegedly involved in numerous vehicle robberies was arrested in Salwa, security sources said. The citizen, who was earlier in police custody for car robberies and was released by mistake, was nabbed following a widespread manhunt launched by the police. Case papers indicate that a citizen had been arrested in Mubrak Al-Kabeer for stealing a luxury car in order to present it to his girlfriend as he had been used to giving her a new vehicle every month.

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Sepp Blatter doing an incredible job of insulting people in one sequence during opening remarks of the Russia FIFA 2018 World Cup organising committee. For reference note that the recent and prospective list of World Cup hosts is South Africa, Brazil, Russia, and Qatar, and that the calls for a boycott of 2018 are based on the Russian incursion and continued subversion of Ukraine --I am honoured specifically also because of the presence of your head of
state, the President of the Russian Federation, Mr Putin, because he
was the architect on the paper to bring the World Cup to Russia. This is
very important to underline, because there was a very big competition
to have this 2018 World Cup back in Europe. They want to have
everything. Generally, when in the compound of Europe, they are speaking
about the big European countries, not politically, but those that have a
stand in football. And so, we had the candidature of England, we had
the candidature of Spain and Portugal, we had the candidature of Belgium
and Holland, and then finally, it was Russia the winner.You
could say it’s normal. It was not normal, because if you know the way
the Europeans – and here, I speak with the European Union – they try to
get all the assets, and when it comes to football, they wanted to have
this World Cup. And I’ll tell you, one of the losers of this World Cup,
they are still unhappy and they are still saying that it is a mistake of
FIFA and a mistake of this Blatter that we didn’t get the World Cup.
And it was the country that has invented not only the game, but fair
play – they have invented fair play. And you know what that means? Fair
play means that you learn to win – that’s easy – but you also learn to
lose, and this is not so easy.But
I’m very happy to be here because it is time to say thanks to you for
the organisation committee here. It’s now a big task. It is a big task,
but it goes on the rotation of the World Cup. The last big event – okay,
you have had a lot of events here in Russia – the last, biggest, event
you have had were the Olympic Games in 1980. And then the Olympic Games,
you know, you have been a little bit bothered because there was a
boycott. And just to close these parentheses, they speak again about the
boycott of the World Cup. But the World Cup is not the Olympic Games.
The World Cup is football, and football cannot be boycotted. Football
cannot be boycotted in any country, and it will not in Russia –
definitely not. And FIFA stands strong behind this organisation in
Russia. That’s one thing.

Just to pick out one thing, Sepp Blatter has told Russia that there is nothing, nothing, they could do which would result in a boycott of the 2018 World Cup.

At Vox, Zach Beauchamp finds a number of reasons (plus one to be sure) to declare victory over ISIS --

For months, ISIS has been trying and failing to take Kobane. Its
recent push, beginning on around September 16, looked likely to succeed.
But Kurdish fighters, with heavy American support, have pushed ISIS
back. Kobane could still fall, but the Kurdish resistance has shattered the perception of ISIS invincibility — a crucial element of its recruiting pitch. "The [loss of] prestige in the jihadi movement could do a lot of
damage to them," Garteinstein-Ross suggests. "ISIS can draw so many
recruits because they're seen as the strong horse, because they're
winning. [Kobane] shifts that perception."

The red flag here is the analysis of ISIS in terms of the strong horse metaphor -- an old expression of Osama bin Laden's, whose greatest trick may have been to get the Bush White House to think about the Middle East in those terms.

The FT's David Gardner has an alternative explanation of Kobane/Ain al-Arab --

The
siege of the Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani, for example, on the border
with Turkey, is often described as strategic or symbolic. Yet there is
no especial imperative why the warriors of the Isis caliphate should
expend the lives of about 500 of their number to seize this particular
stretch of Turkey’s 1,300km frontier with Syria and Iraq. They have
turned Kobani into a symbol, but by attacking it they have driven a
wedge between the neo-Islamist rulers of Turkey and their Kurdish
minority.

Looking at maps and declaring that they've lost this town or that town is not going to cut it. ISIS is moving along the rivers and showing they can slowly tighten the stranglehold around cities without ever having to mount a direct assault. As someone else quoted in the FT article says, they've been reading up. Especially on East Asian insurgencies.

If your humble blogger was advising the White House, the advice would be that it's time to talk some Viet Cong veterans out of retirement and ask them what the US should have done against them in the 1960s. Because that's where we are now in Iraq/Syria.

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Stuff you can't make up (via Reuters): a company backed by Rupert Murdoch and Dick Cheney wants to drill for oil ... near Jerusalem. The end-times -- for parody -- may be upon us:

U.S.-based Genie Energy could turn to the courts or even Mongolia in its effort to challenge a local government decision that has blocked its hunt for oil just over 40 kilometers from Jerusalem, a senior official at the group said.
Genie, backed by media mogul Rupert Murdoch, says it aims to secure energy independence for Israel, a country that has never had a serious oil find despite years of exploration.... Genie Energy was spun off from telecoms group IDT Corp in 2011. As well as Murdoch, it has attracted investment from financier Jacob Rothschild. Together they own a 5.5 percent stake worth $11 million. Former U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney is on the advisory board.

Mayor Bill di Blasio said
on Thursday that "our understanding is that very few people were in
direct contact with him," which would lessen the likelihood that he
could have transmitted the virus to anyone in New York.

The earlier quote is an injunction against assigning probabilities to the Ottawa shooter being an ISIS-radicalized Muslim (as it turns out, he was).

Apparently, some low frequency but high profile events are more worthy of estimates than others.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Our obsession with the Ottawa shooter's religion reveals more about us than about him

It then argues that since we don't yet know the shooter's religion, let alone his motivations (which is true), we shouldn't be talking about potential jihadi motives.

Leaving side the general temptation to discuss everything about every high profile shooting before the facts are known, it is a bit odd for Vox -- data-driven journalism! -- to be arguing that people have no basis to be connecting dots when Canada was still trying to interpret the events barely 2 days beforehand when an alleged Islamic convert rammed his car into two soldiers in a town 30 miles south of Montreal. Of course there could be no connection at all. But data-driven journalism! is all about living with interpretations based on probabilities. And since terrorism in North America is very, very rare, some of those empirical probabilities are going to be based on small sample sizes.

So the Ottawa incident is not just about Michael Zehaf-Bibeau. It's about that incident seen in the light of the earlier incident where a gun was not used -- and therefore already inclined to be ignored -- even though the ramming soldier technique bears strong resemblance to the Woolwich murder of Lee Rigby ... which was motivated by the killers' interpretation of their religion.

Today, no one except some veterans and military historians remembers
Khe Sanh because in the end it had scant strategic significance: Even
though the U.S. won the battle, it lost the war. Not long after having
“liberated” Khe Sanh, the U.S. dismantled the base because it served
little purpose. This history is worth mentioning because of the
parallels, limited and inexact to be sure, between Khe Sanh and Kobani, a
Kurdish town in northern Syria.

Bruce Springsteen, lyrics to Born in the USA --

Had a brother at Khe Sahn fighting off the Viet Cong
They're still there he's all gone

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Vladimir Putin had a telephone conversation with
Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu, during which the Russian
President congratulated Mr Netanyahu on his 65th birthday and wished him success in his important state activity.
Vladimir Putin also sent Mr Netanyahu a message of greetings on his 65th
anniversary, where he noted that during his years as Prime Minister and
in other government positions, Mr Netanyahu has won the respect of his
compatriots and great authority in the world. Mr Putin highly assessed
Mr Netanyahu’s significant contribution to the development of friendly
relations between Russia and Israel.

Friday, October 17, 2014

Alexis Tsipras, the Syriza leader, has toned town his anti-German rhetoric but still wants to negotiate a massive write-down of Greek debt, set to peak this year at 174 percent of national output, a level he considers unsustainable.

Who are those non-crazy leftie economists who think that debt to GDP of 174 per cent is sustainable?

Thursday, October 16, 2014

The New York Times has a superb in-depth piece -- the kind that lesser media outlets would never finance -- on how Saddam's 1980s-era chemical weapons (back when Baathist dictators with chemical weapons were cool) bedeviled the US military post-2003. The story's final hook is that Saddam's main chemical weapons site, which is believed to still contain numerous dangerous munitions, is now controlled by ISIS. The story also notes that their capture of the site was referenced in a Move Along Folks sort of way when it first happened. This Reuters story from July well captures the official indifference:U.S. Defense Department spokesman
Rear Admiral John Kirby said last month that the United States' best
understanding was that "whatever material was kept there is pretty old
and not likely to be able to be accessed or used against anyone right
now.""We aren't viewing
this particular site and their holding it as a major issue at this
point," Kirby said. "Should they even be able to access the materials,
frankly, it would likely be more of a threat to them than anyone else."

It was an ISIS predecessor group, Al Qaeda in Iraq, which was using these same munitions in roadside bombs.

Outgoing European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, presenting what he sees as his ultimate vindication (via Wall Street Journal) --

“We were very close to the abyss at certain moments,” he said. “Now,
when we see some of our countries, including the spectacular growth of
Ireland, it’s the great, unequivocal demonstration that the policies
designed were the right ones.”

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

The White House says that its military action against ISIS is to help Iraq, but it's absolutely not helping Syria. The above is the Assad regime ambassador to Iraq meeting the new Iraqi Prime Minister yesterday, where they amiably discussed their joint struggle against ISIS.

Monday, October 13, 2014

The United States says it does not
want to help Assad's government despite bombing Islamic State, the most
powerful group fighting against Damascus in a three-year-old civil war.
Washington aims to help arm moderates to fight against both Assad and
Islamic State. But within
days of the start of U.S. air strikes in Syria last month, Assad's
government stepped up the tempo of its own air campaign against rebels
closer to the capital Damascus. The
Observatory said the Syrian air force had struck 40 times on Monday in
areas in Idlib and Hama provinces, including dropping oil drums packed
with explosives and shrapnel. Typically Damascus has carried out no more than 12-20 raids a day.

Those indiscriminate Syrian regime attacks -- including but not limited to the barrel bombs -- are almost certainly war crimes. So if they're being facilitated by US military action ...

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Elaborating in a deep dive on the same issue, he adds: But generally speaking, Saudi Arabia is the epicenter of Islam's problems.

Leave aside the fact that his Vox-style map proof barely shows Pakistan, and omits most of Africa including Algeria and Nigeria and let's say it's true that Islam's problems appear centered on Saudi Arabia. It's such a tight correlation that it's almost as if Islam itself might come from Saudi Arabia, and that the Ruler of Saudi Arabia could be considered the "Custodian," if you will, of Islam's holiest sites!

Wednesday, October 08, 2014

With respect to ISIL, it's American leadership that has galvanized the international community to take on what is really the logical conclusion of the sort of violent extremism that's been building up in the Middle East for far too long.

So ISIS/ISIL -- which you might think is what emerged from the brutalization of the Syrian population by Bashar al-Assad -- is actually a pre-ordained culmination of trends in a regional hotbed of extremism!

Tuesday, October 07, 2014

A suicide bomber
killed at least five police officers and wounded 12 others on Sunday
during festivities for a local holiday in Grozny, the capital of
Russia's troubled North Caucasus region of Chechnya, Russian news
agencies reported. The site of two
separatist wars and a festering Islamic insurgency, Chechnya has seen a
period of relative calm under the strong-arm rule of Moscow-backed
leader Ramzan Kadyrov, and suicide bombings have been a rare occurrence
in recent years.

Important to keep this in mind as Russia tries to build support for its "realist" position of Bashar al-Assad being the only solution to Islamist terrorism in Syria and Iraq.

Friday, October 03, 2014

Folks, “all’s changed, changed utterly. A terrible beauty has been born.” Those are the words written by an Irish poet William Butler Yeats about the Easter Rising in 1916 in Ireland. They were meant to describe the status of the circumstance in Ireland at that time. But I would argue that in recent years, they better describe the world as we see it today because all has changed. The world has changed.

Leave aside the minor misquotation. Yeats used to describe ISIS. There are no coincidences!

UPDATE: The White House transcript does not include the Q&A where Biden made the controversial remarks about Turkey and the UAE.